1998 - Year-end Wrap
Trevor Chesterfield
18 December 1998
If you really consider it, the 1932/33 bodyline series was the first
major profile series where the batsman's body replaced the stumps as
the main target area. In the modern era it is the head which has
become the subject of the sort of assault the West Indies quicks have
perfected.
Thus we had the sight of Allan Donald, pinned behind the left ear and
flat on his back, with South Africa team physio Craig Smith and the
captain, Hansie Cronje, charging onto St George's Park. For Smith it
was a matter of assessing the damage; for Cronje it was to remind
Donald of the Devon Malcolm incident at The Oval some four years and a
few months earlier.
Not that Donald needed to utter a similar phrase such as ``You guys are
history''. The West Indies were already history: gone is the throbbing
calypso beat, it has been replaced by the throbbing head. It was a
significant event; perhaps as traumatic as the 1998 year which started
with defeat Down Under and ends at Durban over Christmas. But, in
between, as with Donald's being felled and getting back on his feet,
the incident has mirrored South Africa's year.
It is the sort of heat, generated by such head hunting tactics which
turns the test arena into a genuine battle ground and far removed from
the limited overs contest where rotation of the strike and the white
ball makes the shorter game less of a spectacle. There was much about
the latter half of the Australian tour which was disappointing After
much criticism Jacques Kallis emerged as the firm fixture at three and
looked the part, although the New Year match defeat at Sydney, by an
innings and 21 runs was, like Kingsmead in Durban eight weeks later
one of several low points. At Sydney it was Shane Warne who destroyed
South Africa with a bag of 11 wickets. Impressive, penetrating and
aggressive, his bowling in that game added to the aura. Yet the tour
could have been so different.
Peter Pollock's selection panel controversially left out Fanie de
Villiers from the Australia touring party, and when it was over a
couple of team members admitted his presence in Oz would have made a
major difference to the strength of the bowling attack.
There was a night of magic on January 16, 1998: one Makhaya Ntini,
nursed along during the tour, played against New Zealand in one of the
drawn out limited-overs series matches. His inclusion attracted added
interest and with two for 31 he seemed to have ``arrived''; at least
deserving another crack at the opposition. Unfortunately, instead of
giving the Border youngster another fling, he was ``rested''. At the
time it was a strange decision.
At Adelaide Oval, with Donald injured Shaun Pollock bowled manfully
and put together a world-class bowling performance. If there been a
question mark about his ability they were left in little doubt when it
was over. Unfortunately dropped catches Adam Bacher dropped Mark
Waugh three times as he went on to score a match-saving century -- led
to a drawn test and Dave Richardson's retirement was announced almost
immediately.
Pakistan were already in South Africa when Cronje led his side back
from Adelaide and into a series fraught with more off-field drama and
intrigue than there was on it. It was your typical Pakistan tour of
South Africa. Wasim Akram was controversially dropped (omitted was the
Pakistan Cricket Board's version) after match-fixing claims surfaced,
There were alleged muggings of Saqlain Mushtaq and Mohammad Akram
which delayed the start of the first test at the Wanderers.
Down to Durban where a section of the Kingsmead crowd, known for its
political views and unpatriotic stance, verbally abused Kallis, Donald
and Gary Kirsten. When, with the slightest reaction the crowd ``cried
wolf'' an objection was laid. In Port Elizabeth was more off-field
trauma.
For De Villiers the decision to announce his retirement came much
earlier than he had planned. And however innocent it appeared, such an
event was always going to cause a stir as the preceding volatile
background suggested intrigue and racial overtones.
What annoyed De Villiers was the insinuation, by implication, he had
decided to quit as a United Cricket Board probe into racial
allegations involving four players, and a member of The Management
team, was being investigated. It also left a question mark over the
ethics of those, removed from the scene, who felt they knew the inside
story better.
It was at a time when Dr Ali Bacher, managing director of the UCB,
uttered the famous ``In 1998 an all-white South African (cricket) side
is no longer acceptable''.
There was little doubt, however, that De Villiers had in this case,
become the victim of circumstances. He had already been told that
Paul Adams and Makhaya Ntini would be playing in the first test
against Sri Lanka at Newlands in Cape Town starting nine days later.
In a fairy tale ending De Villiers returned career best test figures
the next day and retired, enabling South Africa to share the series
1-1. And in England, he was missed again. His devastating late
outswing would have done so much to win games at Old Trafford, Trent
Bridge and Leeds. Instead South Africa lost 1-2 to an England side
which was out-played at Lord's it was humiliating. The injury to Lance
Klusener did not help South Africa's cause much either. He was pushed
into the Old Trafford match knowing he might break down.
Limited-overs success in Malaysia (Commonwealth Games) under Pollock
and winning the mini World Cup by beating the West Indies in the final
did not stem the political rhetoric calling for more ``players of
colour'' to be included. Demands which exceed the abilities of the
players who feel that enforced quotas and affirmative action policy is
a stigma and a form of embarrassment, adding extra pressure they can
do without.
Then we have had the West Indies. Brian Lara's ego, money, a camp
divided and performances which would make even the lower fourths at
Pretoria Boys High giggle with red-faced shame, has seen them go down
2-0 in the series with Durban and Cape Town ready to welcome the
tourists as dubious attractions for the holiday season.
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